12
D AILY L OBO new mexico Mr. Family Values see page 4 January 20, 2012 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 friday Inside the Daily Lobo Going pro? See page 8 volume 116 issue 82 58 | 27 TODAY Photo essay See page 2 by Christopher Bartlett [email protected] Ongoing construction has made parts of Lead and Coal Avenues inaccessible since November 2010, forcing some businesses in the affected area to close their doors and leaving others struggling to stay afloat. Nan Morningstar, owner of Free Radicals located on the corner of Yale Boulevard and Lead Avenue, said her business has dropped significantly since construction began, while a clothing store across the street, Steppn-2-Style, was forced to close permanently. “We talk to some of the neighbors and you’ll note that half of the businesses are gone,” she said. “It sucks.” The construction is part of the $26 mil- lion Lead and Coal Improvement Project, which aims to update storm drain infra- structure, landscaping and lighting along Lead and Coal Avenues and reduce both avenues from three lanes to two lanes each. The work is projected to be finished this spring, but local business own- ers said customers still can’t drive up to many of the businesses located on Lead Avenue, bringing in-store traffic nearly to a halt. Ramzi Hijazi, owner and manager of Tri-H Convenience Store and gas station across Yale Boulevard, said the construc- tion has been hurting his business since it began. While Tri-H is still accessible by car, surrounding road closures make the convenience store difficult to get to. He said business has dropped be- tween 50 and 60 percent, and he has been forced to fire employees. “I’ve recently had to work in the store myself in order to compensate because I can’t bring in any new employees,” he said. Luis Rodriguez, an employee at Casa De Piñatas, located on Lead Avenue near Yale Boulevard, said he’s never seen such a decline in business since the store opened 16 years ago. “Business is down 60 to 70 percent from last year,” he said. “It’s been real- ly frustrating dealing with the construc- tion; we’ve already been broken into and robbed because the city took down all the lights in front of the store.” An anti-donation clause in the New Mexico state constitution prevents the city from compensating businesses af- fected by the construction. “Neither the state nor any coun- ty, school district or municipality … shall directly or indirectly lend or Construction project harms local business Francisco Rodriguez, the owner of Casa De Piñatas, says that business has plummeted since the construction on Lead and Coal avenues began in November 2010. Dylan Smith Daily Lobo Luis Rodriguez works for his father making piñatas in Casa De Piñata. The Lead/Coal Improvement Project has hurt business and brought crime to the area since workers broke ground last year, Rodriguez said. Dylan Smith Daily Lobo by Luke Holmen [email protected] UNM Athletics, Popejoy Hall and Student Health and Counseling are among nine on-campus organi- zations that lost their guaranteed funding from student fees for the fiscal year 2013. UNM President David Schmidly on Thursday approved Student Fee Review Board’s recommendation to eliminate the “protected status” of nine groups that currently receive guaran- teed funding from student fees. SFRB Chair and GPSA President Katie Richardson said the measure will give students more control over how funding is given to organiza- tions across campus. “I think that students and the administration feel that student or- ganizations need some consistency from year to year to plan their bud- gets, but now students can make recommendations in whatever form about the funding to determine the way in which students can best be served,” said Richardson. “All or- ganizations that apply for fees are treated the same way and the SFRB has completely flexibility as recom- mendations about the amount that each organization receives.” None of the nine organizations that lost protected funding were available for comment Thursday. Organizations requesting funding for FY13 face strong competition for limited funding. Budget requests this year amount to nearly $17 million, but last year only about $11 million was handed out in student fee allocations. UNM Information Technologies is requesting $3 million in student fees, a nearly 1,200 percent increase from the $231,000 it received last year. Athletics is requesting $3.5 million, about 85 percent more than the $1.9 million it received last year. Right now, the SFRB baseline student fees, the minimum amount students will be charged in fees for FY13 is set at $460 per student, compared to last year’s $486.78. Richardson said she hopes to keep student fees low this year. Organizations in need of funding present their case before the SFRB on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The individual members of the board will deliberate following the hearings this weekend and each of their recommendations will be av- eraged during meetings Feb. 6 and 13. The averages will then be given to the President’s Strategic Budget Leadership Team by Feb. 15. The team votes on the final allocations by March 1. Schmidly also approved a one- year change in the composition of the Athletics no longer guaranteed student fee money Student Health and Counseling Athletics Student Union Building Recreational Services University Libraries UNM Children’s Campus Information Technologies Center for Academic Programs Support Student Government Accounting Office El Centro de La Raza LGBTQ Resource Center Popejoy Hall Music Bands (+30k one time) KUNM Radio African American Student Services American Indian Student Services NMPIRG Women’s Resource Center CLPS (+$20k one time) Research Service Learning Program Project for New Mexico Graduates of Color Career Services OIPS (+$9.5k one time) Theatre & Dance COSAP Language Learning Center PATS (+$100k one time) Total *blue items have historically recieved guaranteed funding but will not recieve reoccuring funding in fiscal year 2013. $191.83 $81.75 $75.73 $29.42 $129.24 $15.00 $10.00 $8.63 $7.50 $4.04 $4.71 $4.06 $3.55 $3.30 $3.26 $2.31 $2.26 $2.12 $1.50 $1.50 $1.49 $1.30 $1.15 $1.13 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $486.78 $4,434,342.28 $1,889,733.00 $1,750,574.68 $680,072.72 $675,911.84 $346,740.00 $231,160.00 $199,491.08 $173,370.00 $108,876.36 $93,850.96 $93,388.64 $82,061.80 $76,282.80 $75,358.16 $53,397.96 $52,242.16 $49,005.92 $34,674.00 $34,674.00 $34,442.84 $30,050.80 $26,583.40 $26,121.08 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $11,252,406.48 $191.83 $149.73 $75.73 $34.70 $49.36 $15.00 $128.34 $9.63 $7.50 $6.42 $6.42 $5.70 $3.16 $2.94 $3.11 $3.32 $4.84 $2.42 $2.34 $1.48 $2.76 $1.29 $1.71 $1.57 $0.81 $8.40 $1.29 $486.78 $4,484,026.25 $3,500,000.00 $1,770,188.75 $811,112.50 $1,153,790.00 $350,625.00 $,3000,000.00 $225,101.02 $175,312.50 $149,997.38 $133,120.63 $150,067.50 $73,907.08 $68,699.13 $72,799.10 $77,605.00 $56,637.63 $54,674.00 $34,674.48 $64,443.01 $30,153.75 $40,000.00 $36,799.96 $19,027.25 $196,350.00 $30,153.75 $16,872,400.73 $113,135.00 Requesting Entity FY 12 Amount 23, 116 FTE FY 12 Total FY 13 Requested 23,375 FTE FY 13 Total Request see Lead & Coal PAGE 5 see SFRB PAGE 5 “Half of the businesses are gone. It sucks.” ~Nan Morningstar Owner of Free Radicals Corner of Yale and Lead

NM Daily Lobo 12012

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 12012

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Mr. FamilyValuessee page 4

Januar y 20, 2012 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895friday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Going pro?

See page 8volume 116 issue 82 58 | 27

TODAYPhotoessay

See page 2

by Christopher [email protected]

Ongoing construction has made parts of Lead and Coal Avenues inaccessible since November 2010, forcing some businesses in the affected area to close their doors and leaving others struggling to stay afloat.

Nan Morningstar, owner of Free Radicals located on the corner of Yale Boulevard and Lead Avenue, said her business has dropped significantly since construction began, while a clothing store across the street, Steppn-2-Style, was forced to close permanently.

“We talk to some of the neighbors and you’ll note that half of the businesses are gone,” she said. “It sucks.”

The construction is part of the $26 mil-lion Lead and Coal Improvement Project, which aims to update storm drain infra-structure, landscaping and lighting along Lead and Coal Avenues and reduce both avenues from three lanes to two lanes each.

The work is projected to be finished this spring, but local business own-ers said customers still can’t drive up to many of the businesses located on Lead Avenue, bringing in-store traffic nearly to a halt.

Ramzi Hijazi, owner and manager of Tri-H Convenience Store and gas station across Yale Boulevard, said the construc-tion has been hurting his business since it began. While Tri-H is still accessible by car, surrounding road closures make the convenience store difficult to get to.

He said business has dropped be-tween 50 and 60 percent, and he has been forced to fire employees.

“I’ve recently had to work in the store myself in order to compensate because I can’t bring in any new employees,” he said.

Luis Rodriguez, an employee at Casa De Piñatas, located on Lead Avenue near Yale Boulevard, said he’s never seen such a decline in business since the store opened 16 years ago.

“Business is down 60 to 70 percent from last year,” he said. “It’s been real-ly frustrating dealing with the construc-tion; we’ve already been broken into and robbed because the city took down all the lights in front of the store.”

An anti-donation clause in the New Mexico state constitution prevents the city from compensating businesses af-fected by the construction.

“Neither the state nor any coun-ty, school district or municipality … shall directly or indirectly lend or

Construction project harms local business

Francisco Rodriguez, the owner of Casa De Piñatas, says that business has plummeted since the construction on Lead and Coal avenues began in November 2010.

Dylan Smith Daily Lobo

Luis Rodriguez works for his father making piñatas in Casa De Piñata. The Lead/Coal Improvement Project has hurt business and brought crime to the area since workers broke ground last year, Rodriguez said. Dylan SmithDaily Lobo

by Luke [email protected]

UNM Athletics, Popejoy Hall and Student Health and Counseling are among nine on-campus organi-zations that lost their guaranteed funding from student fees for the fiscal year 2013.

UNM President David Schmidly on Thursday approved Student Fee Review Board’s recommendation to eliminate the “protected status” of nine groups that currently receive guaran-teed funding from student fees.

SFRB Chair and GPSA President Katie Richardson said the measure will give students more control over how funding is given to organiza-tions across campus.

“I think that students and the administration feel that student or-ganizations need some consistency from year to year to plan their bud-gets, but now students can make recommendations in whatever form about the funding to determine the way in which students can best be served,” said Richardson. “All or-ganizations that apply for fees are treated the same way and the SFRB has completely flexibility as recom-mendations about the amount that each organization receives.”

None of the nine organizations that lost protected funding were available for comment Thursday.

Organizations requesting funding

for FY13 face strong competition for limited funding. Budget requests this year amount to nearly $17 million, but last year only about $11 million was handed out in student fee allocations.

UNM Information Technologies is requesting $3 million in student fees, a nearly 1,200 percent increase from the $231,000 it received last year. Athletics is requesting $3.5 million, about 85 percent more than the $1.9 million it received last year.

Right now, the SFRB baseline student fees, the minimum amount students will be charged in fees for FY13 is set at $460 per student, compared to last year’s $486.78. Richardson said she hopes to keep student fees low this year.

Organizations in need of funding present their case before the SFRB on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

The individual members of the board will deliberate following the hearings this weekend and each of their recommendations will be av-eraged during meetings Feb. 6 and 13. The averages will then be given to the President’s Strategic Budget Leadership Team by Feb. 15. The team votes on the final allocations by March 1.

Schmidly also approved a one-year change in the composition of the

Athletics no longer guaranteed student fee money

Student Health and CounselingAthleticsStudent Union BuildingRecreational ServicesUniversity LibrariesUNM Children’s CampusInformation TechnologiesCenter for Academic Programs SupportStudent Government Accounting Offi ceEl Centro de La RazaLGBTQ Resource CenterPopejoy HallMusic Bands (+30k one time)KUNM RadioAfrican American Student ServicesAmerican Indian Student ServicesNMPIRGWomen’s Resource CenterCLPS (+$20k one time)Research Service Learning ProgramProject for New Mexico Graduates of ColorCareer ServicesOIPS (+$9.5k one time)Theatre & DanceCOSAPLanguage Learning CenterPATS (+$100k one time)Total

$11,252,406.48

$16,872,400.73

*blue items have historically recieved guaranteed funding but will not recieve reoccuring funding in fi scal year 2013.

$191.83$81.75$75.73$29.42$129.24$15.00$10.00$8.63$7.50

$4.04

$4.71$4.06

$3.55$3.30$3.26$2.31$2.26$2.12$1.50$1.50$1.49$1.30$1.15$1.13$0.00$0.00$0.00$486.78

$4,434,342.28$1,889,733.00$1,750,574.68$680,072.72$675,911.84$346,740.00$231,160.00$199,491.08$173,370.00$108,876.36$93,850.96$93,388.64$82,061.80$76,282.80$75,358.16$53,397.96$52,242.16$49,005.92$34,674.00$34,674.00$34,442.84$30,050.80$26,583.40$26,121.08$0.00$0.00$0.00$11,252,406.48

$191.83$149.73$75.73$34.70$49.36$15.00$128.34$9.63$7.50

$6.42

$6.42$5.70

$3.16$2.94$3.11$3.32$4.84$2.42$2.34$1.48$2.76$1.29$1.71$1.57$0.81$8.40$1.29$486.78

$4,484,026.25$3,500,000.00$1,770,188.75$811,112.50$1,153,790.00$350,625.00$,3000,000.00$225,101.02$175,312.50$149,997.38$133,120.63$150,067.50$73,907.08$68,699.13$72,799.10$77,605.00

$56,637.63$54,674.00$34,674.48$64,443.01$30,153.75$40,000.00$36,799.96$19,027.25$196,350.00$30,153.75$16,872,400.73

$113,135.00

Requesting Entity

FY 12 Amount

23, 116 FT

E

FY 12 To

tal

FY 13 Requeste

d

23,375 FTE

FY 13 To

tal

Request

FY 12 Total FY 13 Total Request

see Lead & Coal PAGE 5

see SFRB PAGE 5

“Half of the businesses are gone. It sucks.”

~Nan MorningstarOwner of Free Radicals

Corner of Yale and Lead

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 12012

PAGETWONEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOFR I D A Y, J A N U A R Y 20, 2012

volume 116 issue 82Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published daily except Saturday, Sunday and school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $75 per academic year. E-mail [email protected] for more information on subscriptions.The New Mexico Daily Lobo is published by the Board of UNM Student Publications. The editorial opinions expressed in the New Mexico Daily Lobo are those of the respective writers and do not necessarily re� ect the views of the students, faculty, sta� and regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content should be made to the editor-in-chief. All content appearing in the New Mexico Daily Lobo and the Web site dailylobo.com may not be reproduced without the consent of the editor-in-chief. A single copy of the New Mexico Daily Lobo is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies is considered theft and may be prosecuted. Letter submission policy: The opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Letters and guest columns must be concisely written, signed by the author and include address and telephone. No names will be withheld.

PRINTED BY SIGNATURE

OFFSET

Editor-in-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorElizabeth ClearyNews EditorChelsea ErvenAssistant News EditorLuke HolmenPhoto EditorDylan SmithCulture EditorAlexandra SwanbergAssistant Culture EditorNicole Perez

Sports EditorNathan FarmerAssistant Sports EditorCesar DavilaCopy ChiefAaron WiltseMultimedia EditorJunfu HanDesign DirectorJason GabelDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanElyse JalbertStephanie Kean

Robert LundinSarah LynasAdvertising ManagerShawn JimenezClassified ManagerBrittany Brown

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Photo Essay: Fresh Start

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo

“La Cultura Cura” or The Culture Cure is the philosophy that draws in youth and elders alike to become part of La Plazita Institute, a non-profit organization founded by Albino Garcia. La Plazita reaches out to gang members looking to move away from a life of violence and get fresh start. With the new establishment of a silversmith and screen printing shop, La Plazita will open its doors to youths who are interested in exploring the arts.

(Above) A painting hangs in the meeting room of La Plazita.

(Left))Al Na’ir Lara shows screen printing designs to Tyla Eustace (right). Lara is a UNM graduate with an Art Studio degree, and he will be teaching a screen printing class this upcoming summer at La Plazita Institute.

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 12012

New Mexico Daily lobo

Intelligent Design Documentary

Metamorphosis The Case for Intelligent Design in a

Chrysalis

7-9 PM Jan 24th UNM Law School Rm 2405

SPONSORED BY THE INTELLIGENT DESIGN NETWORK NEW MEXICO DIVISION

www.nmidnet.org

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1/21

Daily Lobo: 3 col x 4 inches

Run dates: January 9, January 17 through 27

Regardless of residency status, students enrolling in Correspondence Courses will be charged at the New Mexico Resident Undergraduate rate.

This change in tuition rate is e�ective beginning with the Spring 2012 Semester.

Visit the Correspondence website for details:

correspondence.unm.edu

Take advantage of resident tuition rates

with Correspondence Courses.

277-1604 [email protected]

For current tuition rates, visit www.unm.edu/~bursar/tuitionrates.html

Attention

Non-resident

Students!!Don’t worry... it kinda looks like you’re taking notes.

daily crosswordin the lobo features

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

news Friday, January 20, 2012 / Page 3

by Jessica [email protected]

UNM groups are preparing for their day at the Roundhouse to rally in favor of students and the broader University community.

Before students, parents and alumni head to Santa Fe for UNM Day at the Legislature on Jan 31, GPSA has been surveying stu-dents and holding workshops to get a better idea of where students stand on issues such as the tuition tax credit and research grants.

Travis McIntyre, GPSA Lobby Committee co-chair, said he hopes UNM Day will show legislators the importance of supporting the University this legislative session.

“We especially like students to speak with legislators from their district so that the legislators put a face to UNM and understand that UNM serves the entire state,” McIntyre said.

ASUNM, the UNM Parent Association and UNM Alumni Association are among the other groups that will represent the University at the event.

McIntyre said GPSA is watching the progress of the State Graduate Employment Tax Credit, a bill that aims to create job opportunities in New Mexico for graduate and professional students.

Sen. Tim Keller (D, Bernalillo) is sponsoring the bill, which would provide a $5,000 tax credit to

employers who hire New Mexico college graduates in science, technology, engineering, health and math-related fields.

The GPSA is also working to pass a senate appropriation of $100,000 to fund graduate and professional research, McIntyre said. He said that if the bill pass-es, GPSA students can apply for a grant of up to $5,000 to support their research projects.

ASUNM will provide students free round-trip Rail Runner tickets, a free lunch at Tomasita’s Restaurant in Santa Fe and a letter from Interim Dean of Students Kim Kloeppel excusing students from class to all undergraduate students who RSVP to attend UNM Day, said Florencio Olguin, ASUNM executive director of Governmental Affairs.

“Overall, the more students that attend UNM Day, the better our chance of being successful in our lobbying efforts,” he said. ”Legislators would rather hear from the students than adminis-trators who represent us.”

ASUNM’s 2012 legislative priorities include continuing the Lottery Scholarship, eliminating the tuition tax credit, creating a new commuter shuttle and improving lighting on campus, Olguin said.

“We have postcards in the ASUNM office that students can fill out talking about how the Lottery

(Scholarship) has helped them in their undergraduate academic career at UNM,” he said. “This will positively impact UNM students by showing our legislators that we, as students, are appreciative of the Lottery and that it helps foster success.”

The Parent Association will also bus groups of interested par-ents to Santa Fe for UNM Day, Parent Association President Ma-ria Probasco said.

“We must all take responsibil-ity and become involved in edu-cation in order for our students to succeed,” she said. “The general public must be prepared to hold their elected representatives ac-countable and ask themselves how many more generations of New Mexico students are they willing to see fail and fall through the cracks when they cast their vote.”

The Parent Association also plans to focus on encouraging legislators to eliminate the tu-ition tax credit, continue the New Mexico Legislative Lottery Schol-arship and distribute funds fair-ly among four-year and two-year institutions of higher education, Probasco said.

“If we are successful in this ef-fort, students, parents and edu-cation will benefit for years to come,” Probasco said.

Support UNM, get free lunch

UNM Day at the New Mexico State Legislative Session The Issues:

The Tuition Tax Credit — The tax credit is a percentage of each student’s tuition that UNM must pay to the legislature. This means UNM doesn’t receive the full amount of tuition each student pays and must raise tuition to compensate. The tuition tax for the 2010-11 school year was 5 percent, which means 5 percent of each student’s tuition went to the legislature where it is not required to be spent on higher education. UNM groups hope to convince state legislators to eliminate the tuition credit during this year’s UNM day at the legislature.

Legislative Lottery Scholarship— Members of the Legislative Finance Committee have questioned the viability of the Legislative Lottery Scholarship funds, which they predict will be in the red by 2014. UNM groups hope to convince state legislators to prioritize maintaining the scholarship fund in upcoming years.

SB 16, State Graduate Employment Tax Credit— This bill proposes a $5,000 tax credit to employers who hire New Mexico college graduates in science, technology, engineering, health and math-related fields.

Translator defends CaptainBy Alison Mutler and Nicole

Winfield The Associated Press

ROME — A young Moldovan woman, who says she was called to the bridge of the stricken Costa Concordia to help evacuate Russian passengers, defended the embattled captain on Thursday, saying he worked tirelessly and “saved over 3,000 lives.”

Domnica Cemortan, who says she was translating Capt. Francesco Schettino’s orders during the frenzied evacuation, has emerged as a potential new witness in the investigation into

the officer’s actions the night the ship ran aground.

Schettino is under house arrest, fac-ing possible charges of manslaughter, abandoning ship and causing a ship-wreck after he made an unauthorized detour from the programmed route that caused the vessel to slam into a reef and capsize off the Tuscan island of Giglio. At least 11 people were killed and 21 are missing.

Meanwhile, a new audiotape of the doomed vessel’s first communications with maritime authorities showed the ship’s officers continued to report only an electrical problem for more than 30

minutes after hitting the reef.Attention has focused on Cemortan

amid reports by crew and passengers that Schettino was seen eating dinner with a Russian-speaking woman at the time of the impact. The 25-year-old Cemortan speaks Russian and had worked as a hostess for the Italian cruise operator, although her contract had expired and she was vacationing with friends when she boarded the luxury liner hours before the Jan. 13 disaster.

“I saw him at the restaurant. He was

see Ship page 7

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 12012

[email protected] Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Friday

January 20, 2012

Page

4

by Jacob P. WellmanDaily Lobo Guest Columnist

As a new semester kicks off, we have plenty to look forward to in addition to a new schedule of classes. This semester will mark an important transition period for the University.

This week begins the legislative session in Santa Fe, where a new funding formula for New Mexico’s universities will be tested — a budget-ary mechanism that rewards higher graduation rates, improvements in student success and ac-ademic achievement in minority populations.

This spring, the University community will begin to benefit from the provost’s academic strategic planning initiative, which will help all of us to identify our strengths, and the paths by which we can continue to enhance the higher education of New Mexico.

As the semester concludes, we will have an opportunity to celebrate and appreciate the new heights and frontiers that UNM has reached in the last five years, thanks to President David Schmidly’s leadership. And beginning June 1st, we will welcome our 21st President, Robert Frank, back home with high hopes and helping hands. Aside from an unsavory cartoon, campus and Albuquerque media outlets have worked hard to introduce Dr. Frank to our community.

We will all spend substantial time this spring learning more about our incoming leader. To start, I’d like to briefly touch on how Dr. Frank became the president-elect of our state’s flagship research institution.

The search for UNM’s 21st president has been hailed as both the most inclusive and transparent search many have seen at the University, and rightly so. Prior to the start of the actual search, the Regents’ Academ-ic/Student Affairs and Research Committee

held public forums and met with constitu-ency groups to compile opinions and input from around the University on what qualifi-cations the next president should possess.

As a result of these meetings, we were able to provide a detailed, exhaustive “job description” to guide the search committee in their work. Regent President Jack Fortner assembled a qualified search committee of 29 members representing students, staff, faculty, deans and community members from all around the state. This group solicited nominations from within and outside our campus, and considered a large pool of incredibly qualified leaders in education from around the country.

In order to effectively outreach to a pool of qualified candidates, the University partnered with a search consultant, Alberto Pimentel. While criticisms of consultants include their high cost to the University, it should be noted that Pimentel negotiated with UNM to recruit and provide access to candidates at a reduced rate.

After an exhaustive round of preliminary interviews, the search committee forwarded their recommendations to the Board of Regents, which proceeded to select five finalists to come to campus for public interviews. It should be remembered that every member of the diverse search committee ranked Robert Frank in their list of top candidates.

On Jan. 4th, 2012, the regents unanimously voted to hire Dr. Frank as our next president. There are many reasons to be excited about Dr. Frank’s arrival in Albuquerque on June 1. Just as you and I carry a vested interest in our next president and the changes he will make to our school, Dr. Frank will be directly responsible for the quality of his own degrees — he has three from UNM.

As a student who lives on campus, I am excited that our next president will be among the 3500 residents living on campus, with a doorstep only feet from Zimmerman Library, the Duck Pond, and our Student Union Building. In addition to these posi-tive image-builders, Dr. Frank has an hon-est record of making the organizations he’s led successful.

At the University of Florida (one of the nation’s premier public universities), he was recognized with awards and an endowed chair in his name for his leadership as the dean of the College of Public Health and Health Professions. Currently, he has brought great success to Kent State University as provost by increasing student retention and academic success by large margins. These are areas UNM needs significant help in, and I look forward to utilizing Dr. Frank’s experience to help our own students succeed.

As with every transition, our potential for success with Robert Frank is limitless. He will be on campus periodically this semester and has committed to engaging the campus in a 100-day listening and learning period before making changes on campus.

Let’s all be team players and help educate him on what makes our university wonderful and how he can take us to the next level. Early criticism and paranoia will not do much to advance our state or UNM; let’s welcome our next leader with a hopeful attitude for a stronger University.

Jacob P. Wellman is the student regent at UNM. He writes a monthly column for the Daily Lobo about the ins and outs of what the regents do at UNM. Any questions you might have for him about the regents or the Univer-sity should be sent to [email protected].

EDITORIAL BOARD

Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief

Elizabeth ClearyManaging Editor

Chelsea ErvenNews Editor

COLumn

Stay positive as UNM transitions

Hello Lobos,

By this point you have fought to the end of the first week of the spring semester. It seemed long, didn’t it? Then I suppose I have no need to remind you that it was only a four-day week, and that next week will be longer.

But enough with the bad news. I wanted to take a moment for shameless self-pro-motion in the form of calling attention to the Daily Lobo Boot Kamp. It takes place this weekend, and it’s a perfect chance for those interested in journalism to learn from professionals in the field at no cost.

Don’t get me wrong, there’s nothing wrong with classes. But you can’t beat learning directly from professionals. I mean, these people are given money for their journalism abilities. So if you’d like to be given money someday for your journal-ism abilities, you should probably come to boot camp.

The boot camp is also an opportunity to meet editors from the news, sports and culture sections of the Daily Lobo, and they are looking to hire reporters.

If you want to write for us, or are even just curious, then this is your chance to talk directly to the people capable of hiring you. That said, get yourself to journalismboot-kamp.wordpress.com for more information and to sign up.

Like I said, no payment necessary — we just need to know how many people are coming. Or if you want to rebel, you can just show up at the honors building on Saturday at 9 a.m. and go from there. We won’t like you as much, but you’ll still be welcome.

Self-promotion out of the way, I’d like to drag your attention elsewhere. If your eyes and ears were functioning Wednesday, you know that many Internet giants, Google and Wikipedia included, made changes to their websites in protest of SOPA/PIPA.

If for some reason you’re out of the loop, these jumbles of letters represent bills in Congress that could limit Internet freedom. Naturally, the Internet doesn’t enjoy being limited, so it limited itself for a day in protest via blackouts of popular sites. Trust me, it makes sense if you think about it long enough, or if you don’t think about it at all.

Regardless, early reports suggest that the protest might have changed some minds, as many senators and representa-tives switched sides on the debate. Accord-ing to ProPublica, on Jan. 18 there were 80 supporters for the bill and 31 opponents. As of Jan. 19 there were only 65 supporters of the bills and 101 opponents.

As many of you know, I have been struggling to bring attention to this issue for a while, and I am glad for the success of the blackout, but the efforts shouldn’t end here.

Our culture seems to be obsessed with the idea of making one grand movement and expecting that it will change everything. Think of all the shitty rom-coms in which the protagonist admits his undying love for the female lead in some grandiose, contrived gesture and wins her over, as seen in “Love, Actually” and movies like it.

This storyline is paralleled in actions films, where there is always a battle for the fate of Earth, again as seen in

EDITORIAL

“Independence Day” or any and all action movies, for the most part.

And that whole epic climax deal is fine, and even necessary, for storytelling; but we are not in a movie.

Life failed English, and doesn’t understand the concept of a climax. If we treat every victory as the only goal, if every grand gesture is the end, then we will lose. Change is gradual, not immediate.

There are still plenty of members of Congress who don’t get the Internet. Hell, maybe they do, but the money from

Hollywood is more powerful. Who knows? I don’t. I do know there’s more work to be done in favor of Internet freedom and it can start right here in New Mexico. Tom Udall, Jeff Bingaman, and Ben R. Luján are all supporters of the bills. If you care about a free Internet, then let them know instead of complaining online or laughing about how SOPA/PIPA sounds like sopaipilla.

Do it now.

Chris Quintana Editor-in-chief

And that whole epic climax deal is fine, and

even necessary, for storytelling; but we are

not in a movie.

Attend boot camp, oppose SOPA

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Friday, January 20, 2012 / Page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

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ALBUQUERQUE. — Authori-ties say a student at an Albuquer-que charter school has been fa-tally stabbed, allegedly by another teenager.

Albuquerque police say a 17-year-old boy is in custody in connection with Thursday’s incident outside César Chavez Community School.

KRQE-TV reports that tension between the two students was building all day and the two fought outside the school about 3 p.m.

The names of the victim and suspect haven’t been released by police.

Authorities say the suspect is facing a homicide charge.

WASHINGTON— A House com-mittee looking into the flawed gun-smuggling investigation called Operation Fast and Furious has subpoenaed a federal prosecutor in Arizona for questioning.

Republican Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Com-mittee, said Thursday that Patrick Cunningham repeatedly refused to testify voluntarily about his role in the operation that relied on a con-troversial law enforcement tactic designed to identify and prosecute major weapons traffickers.

According to Issa, the commit-tee has information that Cunning-ham played a role in approving the tactic, which resulted in federal agents losing track of weapons that later ended up at crime scenes in

Mexico and the U.S.Cunningham, who is resigning

effective Jan. 27 to take a job in the private sector, has been chief of the criminal division in the U.S. Attor-ney’s Office in Phoenix for the past two years.

Justice Department spokes-woman Tracy Schmaler declined to comment about the subpoena.

SANTA FE — New Mexico State Police are joining efforts to ramp up drunken driving patrols along U.S. 550 in San Juan County.

State Police Major Darren Soland announced Thursday that the department has secured additional funding and reached agreement with the Navajo Nation, San Juan Sheriff’s Department and DPS Special Investigations Division to increase patrols from Bloomfield to Cuba.

The operational plans are being drawn up and should be in place by Jan. 27.

Local law enforcement agencies have already increased their pres-ence on the rural four-lane stretch of road after six drunken driving-related deaths in six weeks.

ALBUQUERQUE — A Bernalillo County grand jury has indicted a woman on charges that she stabbed her 8-year-old son with a screw-driver in his head, neck and chest.

Thirty-one-year-old Liesha Hen-derson was charged in Wednes-day’s indictment with child abuse, kidnapping, aggravated battery and aggravated assault.

Albuquerque police say Hen-derson was under the influence of methamphetamines when she stabbed her son on Dec. 30.

The boy’s injuries weren’t life-threatening.

It is not known whether Henderson has a lawyer.

She is being held in jail on a $100,000 bond.

FARMINGTON — The executive director of the Farmington Convention and Visitors Bureau has resigned amid an investigation into embezzlement allegations.

The Farmington Daily Times reports that Debbie Dusenbery resigned Tuesday and delivered a check for more than $100,000 to police.

Police began investigating Dusenbery on Friday after several employees reported the possible crimes.

Dusenbery’s attorney Victor Titus says his client is going to do what’s right and that a full audit will need to be conducted to determine the full scope of the situation.

Police have seized Dusenbery’s computers and financial documents.

Farmington Police Sgt. Robert Perez, who leads the investigation, declined to release specific information about the investigation.

Investigators also were reluctant to give a specific dollar amount they believe was embezzled. - AP

board, from four undergraduate students and three graduates to five undergraduates and two graduates. The board now requires six out of seven votes for a fee change. Previously, a simple majority was required.

Richardson said the changes to the composition of the board and the supermajority rule are on a trial basis.

“Public comment changes went out last semester and the public returned with 25 comments

about the policy, some of which raised concerns,” she said. “Upon reviewing these comments … we requested the change … on a one-year trial basis.”

Dylan Hoffman, who became the fifth undergraduate on the board on Thursday, said he be-lieves the new changes will prove to be beneficial.

“I think that is what this year is about,” he said. “We are on a tri-al year with this setup and time will tell how the process works. I

think it’s more representative of the undergraduate population, but we will have to work through the hearings and the deliberation to be sure.”

Graduate student fees account for about 22 percent of UNM’s to-tal student fees, and will make up roughly 28.5 percent of the board, down from the current 43 percent. The board’s chair position switch-es between an ASUNM or GPSA representative each year.

SFRB from page 1

pledge its credit or make any do-nation to or in aid of any person, association of public or private corporation,” the clause states.

Mark Motsko, spokesman for the city’s Department of Munici-pal Development, said the city has made an effort to work with the affected businesses by send-ing notices in advance concern-ing road closures.

“We’ve been doing outreach even before the construction

started to let the business owners know that during construction we would work with them,” he said. “It hasn’t been for a lack of effort that we’ve maintained access to all the businesses in the corridor.”

Motsko said the city initiated the project in response to com-plaints concerning the high vol-ume of traffic on Lead and Coal Avenues from those living in the surrounding neighborhoods. He said that before construction be-

gan, both Lead and Coal Avenues had three lanes, which carried up to 27,000 vehicles per day through highly populated residential areas.

He said the city sought input from a task force of neighborhood representatives before construc-tion began.

“What we’re doing is following up with the neighbors’ requests to make it feel like a neighborhood-friendly atmosphere,” Motsko said.

Lead & Coal from page 1

New Mexico news briefs

The schedule for the SFRB hearings is posted on the GSPA website under the SFRB tab atwww.unm.edu/~gpsa

SFRB Members:Chair: Katie Richardson, GPSA PresidentVice Chair: Jaymie Roybal, ASUNM President

Graduate Members: Japji Hundal Matthew Rush (Alternate) Elisa Guadalupe Pintor (Alternate)

Undergraduate Members: Angelica Gallegos Greg Montoya-Mora Cassie Thompson Dylan Hoffman Alternate TBD

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Page 6 / Friday, January 20, 2012 news New Mexico Daily lobo

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by Philip ElliottThe Associated Press

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C.— Rick Santorum on Thursday pleaded with conservatives not to give up on his presidential hopes, urging them to resist calls to rally behind Newt Gingrich.

“If we are going to be successful in this race, we have to nominate someone who is going to make Barack Obama the issue in this race, not be the issue himself in the race,” Santorum said ahead of the final debate before South Carolina’s primary Saturday. “We can’t have a candidate that, every day when you open the newspaper, it’s an ‘Oh, my — oh, what did he say today?’ moment. We need someone who is stable.”

As proof that Santorum still has juice, the former Pennsylvania sen-ator pointed to a new endorsement from James Dobson, who founded the conservative Focus on the Fami-ly organization, and updated results from the Iowa caucuses that show Santorum actually edged Mitt Rom-ney in the first state to weigh in on the GOP nomination battle.

“There have been two contests,” Santorum said. “We won one.”

Santorum bested Romney by 34 votes in the final tally of Iowa’s caucuses, Republican officials said Thursday. But no winner was de-clared because some votes remain uncertified two weeks after the event’s closest contest ever. The state GOP initially declared Romney the victor — by just eight votes.

“This is a solid win. It’s a much stronger win than the win Gov. Romney claimed to have,” Santo-rum declared.

Romney, who won New Hampshire’s primary, called the Iowa results a “virtual tie.” Santorum called it a sign that any calls for him to leave were premature.

“We feel very, very good about what this win will mean,” Santorum said of Iowa’s fresh results. “It says

that we can win elections. We can organize. We can put together an effort to pull the resources together to be able to be successful in being the person who can defeat Mitt Romney. Guess what? We defeated Mitt Romney in Iowa.”

Santorum is knitting together a grass-roots organization of socially conservative Republicans, including pastors, similar the one that helped him finish at the top in Iowa.

“Everywhere I go it feels just like Iowa,” said Chuck Laudner, who was a senior Iowa adviser to Santo-rum and now is leading the effort to woo clergy in South Carolina.

Santorum’s advisers, however, worry that Romney has an advantage among voters who have already cast absentee ballots. With Romney run-ning strong in the polls and fundrais-ing, conservatives who oppose his nomination are trying to build a co-alition around one of their own. San-torum said that choice should be him — and not Gingrich, who picked up

the endorsement of one-time con-tender Rick Perry earlier in the day.

Looking to motivate the Christian conservatives, Santorum urged voters to consider his rivals’ priorities on social issues.

“Congressman Gingrich routinely puts these issues at the back of the bus and sees them as controversial issues that need to be avoided,” he said.

Santorum also urged conservatives to imagine what a head-to-head contest with Obama will hold. He said both Gingrich and Romney had shared Obama’s views on the Wall Street bailout and health care mandates in the past, muting potential criticism of the incumbent president.

“How can you differentiate our-selves on the major issues of the day if we nominate Tweedledum and Tweedledee,” Santorum asked conservatives later in Charleston, “instead of someone who stood up and said, ‘No’?”

Santorum asks for support

David Goldman / AP PhotoStudents from Citadel Military College of South Carolina watch as Republican presidential candidate former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks to the Southern Republican Leadership Conference Thursday, in Charleston, S.C.

London secures the Thamesby Paisley DoddsThe Associated Press

LONDON — The river Thames buzzed with activity Thursday — helicopters hovering ahead, speed

see Olympicspage 7

boats ready to catch potential ter-rorists and military units testing their skills as part of a drill for the 2012 London Olympics.

The Thames is Britain’s best-known river, immortalized in the novels of Charles Dickens, and a waterway once so putrid that it shut Parliament because of its stench. It’s now getting the Olympics treatment because of its potential to give would-be terrorists a foothold.

“There’s no specific threat, but we would be failing in our duty if we didn’t consider it,” nation-al Olympics security coordinator Chris Allison said. He said forc-es were testing methods used to make vessels stop and practicing boarding-at-sea procedures.

A navy helicopter swooped overhead as crafts maneuvered on the Thames, known for its strong currents and tides, as London’s Marine Policing Unit and Roy-al Marines worked to make sure the police and military know how to work together on the river that snakes some 210 miles (338 ki-lometers) across England. Jour-nalists watched as a helicopter

hovered over the river and secu-rity forces, with weapons drawn, boarded a ferry.

Policing the vast territory for the games in July and August won’t be easy. The security detail around the Olympics has grown to involve the military and hundreds of secu-rity guards.

The tests this week have in-volved about 44 police officers and 94 military personnel in the run-up to the Games, which start July 27th and end Aug. 12th.

Some recent terror attacks like the Mumbai shooting spree in 2008 were launched from virtually unpatrolled waterways. Terrorists in the Indian metropolis arrived on small high-speed boats prior to their deadly attack that killed 166 people.

British authorities want to make sure the same type of attack doesn’t happen in London. Security officials have expressed concerns over would-be attackers using the river as a means of access into the games, but they are also concerned that attacks could be launched against London’s financial center,

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Friday, January 20, 2012 / Page 7newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

Olympics from page 6which sits close to its banks.

Security officials say they also worry about scares away from the Olympic Village that could divert resources away from a real attack.

Security has long been a high priority for the Olympics. A terror attack at the 1972 Olympics in Munich killed 11 Israeli ath-letes and coaches.

And London was the first Western European capital to be struck by suicide bombers in 2005 — the day after the city won its bid to host the games. Some 52 commuters were killed during the rush-hour attack in July 2005.

About 12,000 police officers will also be on duty on the busiest days of the games — together up to 13,500 troops deployed on

land, at sea and in the skies. A huge pres-ence of private security guards will also safeguard Olympic venues.

The Thames is a less-than-enticing van-tage point for the Olympics — even for would-be attackers.

Although it has been cleaned up since the “Great Stink” of 1858 that forced the House of Commons to stay at home, its muddy

reputation precedes itself. Comedian David Walliams battled diarrhea after doing a charity swim along the River Thames last year.

The journey is almost seven times the distance of the English Channel and is associated with the Victorian-era novels of Dickens, such as “Bleak House.”

with a blonde woman. He did not look drunk. They were just eating,” a Filipi-no cocktail waitress, Gladly Baldera-ma, said of Schettino.

Another Filipino crew member, Roger Barsita, said he served Schettino and a woman dinner.

“I have no idea who she is,” he told The Associated Press in Manila. “Some of the waiters said she’s Russian.”

In interviews with Moldovan me-dia, Cemortan said she was dining with “colleagues, so to speak” in the ship’s restaurant when the ship struck the reef. She said she was summoned to the bridge to translate instructions for passengers, particularly Russians, since she speaks several languages. Moldova is a former Soviet republic.

“All our colleagues made an-nouncements in different languages because there was a problem with the electricity. It was very dark on the ship,” she told the Moldovan daily Adevarul. “I stayed on the bridge in case the cap-tain needed me to make an announce-ment. There were about 20 more offi-cers, cruise directors and the captain.”

She defended Schettino and crew members against criticism of a chaot-ic evacuation, saying they saved thou-sands of lives.

“He did a great thing, he saved over 3,000 lives,” she told Moldova’s Jurnal TV.

Prosecutor Francesco Verusio declined to comment on Italian media reports that Cemortan was being sought as a witness, citing the ongoing investigation.

Divers, meanwhile, were focusing on an evacuation route on the ship’s fourth level, now about 60 feet (18 meters) below the surface, where five bodies were found earlier this week, Navy spokesman Alessandro Busonero told Sky TG 24. Crews set off small explosions to blow holes into hard-to-reach areas for easier access by divers.

Seven of the dead were iden-tified Thursday by authorities — four French passengers, one Spanish and one Italian passenger and one Peruvian crew member. Italian passenger Giovanni Masia, who would have turned 86 next week, was buried in Sardinia.

Italian authorities have iden-tified 32 people who have either died or are missing: two Ameri-cans, 12 Germans, seven Italians, six French, two Peruvians and one person each from Hungary, India and Spain.

Meanwhile, a new audiotape of the Concordia’s first contact with maritime authorities appeared to support allegations that the cap-tain and other senior officers were slow to recognize the seriousness of the accident.

In the tape, which begins at 10:12 p.m., the port authority asks if everything is OK. A Concordia officer replies that the ship had experienced a blackout, even though it had hit the reef more than half an hour earlier.

Italian media reported the officer on the call was Schettino, but that could

not be independently confirmed.The port official tells the officer that

a relative of a crew member had re-ported to police on the mainland that “during the dinner everything fell on his head” — a reference to flying plates and glasses in the ship’s restaurant af-ter the impact.

“No, negative, we have a blackout and we are verifying the conditions on board,” the response came. The port official then asked if passengers had suited up in life vests.

“I repeat, we are verifying the conditions of the blackout,” the offi-cer said.

Passengers and crew members have faulted Schettino and other se-nior officers for failing to act quick-ly, delaying evacuation until the ship was listing too severely to lower many of the lifeboats.

“They asked us to make an-nouncements to say that it was elec-trical problems and that our tech-nicians were working on it and not to panic,” a French steward, Thiba-ult Francois, told France-2 television. “I told myself, ‘This doesn’t sound good.’”

He said he eventually started es-corting passengers to lifeboats on or-ders from his boss, not the captain. “No, there were no orders from the management,” he said.

An Indian waiter agreed.“The emergency alarm was sound-

ed very late,” only after the ship “start-ed tilting and water started seeping in,” said Mukesh Kumar, who arrived

home in New Delhi on Thursday.Cemortan, however, defended the

captain and crew.“How dare they accuse us that we

were incompetent when we saved 3,000 lives,” she wrote on her Facebook page. “Incompetent are the ones who have a poisonous tongue.”

Cemortan described heroic efforts by crew members to help passengers in a dark and listing ship.

“We were looking for them, search-ing for them,” she told Jurnal. “We heard them all crying, shouting in all languages.”

“I couldn’t see a thing, I could just hear how the ship was creaking and how heavy things were coming from

above down to where the ship was leaning,” she wrote on Facebook.

She said Schettino stayed on deck at least until 11:50 p.m., when he or-dered her into a lifeboat.

Late Thursday, Miami-based Carnival Corp., which owns Italian operator Costa Crociere SpA, announced it was conducting a comprehensive audit of all 10 of its cruise lines to review safety and emergency response procedures in the wake of the Costa disaster.

In addition, the Miami-based com-pany, the world’s largest cruise line, said it was conducting an outside re-view of the Concordia grounding itself.

Gregorio Borgia / AP PhotoA rescuer sits on a rock near the cruise ship Costa Concordia keeled over on its side in the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Thursday. The $450 million Costa Concordia was carrying more than 4,200 passengers and crew when it slammed into well-charted rocks off the Tuscan

Ship from page 3

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Page 8 / Friday, January 20, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

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Men’s Basketball, Women’s Basketball,

Skiing, Swimming & Diving, Men’s Tennis and Track & Field GOOOOO

LOBOS!

The list of upcoming Lobo athletic events is published

every Friday in the Daily Lobo.

To advertise in this special section, call 277-5656!

Men’s Basketball Sat 01/21@ UNLV

Wed 01/25vs. Colorado State 8pm

The Pit

Women’s BasketballSat 01/21

vs. UNLV 2pmThe Pit

Wed 01/25@ Colorado State

SkiingFri-Sat 01/20-21

Nordic @ Denver Invitationalin Devil’s Thumb Ranch, CO

Swimming & DivingSat 01/21

@ Colorado State

Men’s TennisSat 01/21

vs. Nevada 4pmMon 01/23

vs. Texas A&M Corpus Christi 6pm

Lobo Tennis Complex

Track & FieldFri-Sat 01/20-21

Indoor hosts Cherry & Silver Invitational

UNM Track Stadium

Upcoming Athletic Events

by Nathan [email protected]

For many college athletes, competing professionally is just a dream.

But not for men’s soccer mid-fielders Lance Rozeboom and Mi-chael Green, seniors who were both drafted in the supplemental rounds of the Major League Soccer (MLS) draft last Tuesday.

“It’s a good feeling. It took about four or five minutes before it actually sunk in. I guess I was in shock that it all happened,” Green said.

Neither player was chosen in the first 38 picks of the first and second rounds of the MLS draft, but were held over to the supplemental draft.

Green was selected number four to the Toronto Football Club, and Rozeboom, the 26th pick, is going to DC United.

Unlike the actual draft, the players picked in the supplemental draft are given a chance to practice with the team during preseason and hopefully be signed by the team.

Green said now that he has

Seniors picked for pro draft

Daily Lobo File PhotoUNM’s midfielder Michael Green races past Air Force’s Conor Henry at the Soccer Complex on Oct. 16, 2011.

been picked, it’s up to him to work hard and make the roster for the upcoming season.

“Now, hopefully, I’ll make the team and put good name out there for New Mexico,” he said.

Green and Rozeboom were the only seniors on the team this year and led the Lobos to their first undefeated season in history, going 18-0-4.

UNM was ranked as high as No. 1 this season but was given the No. 10 seed in the NCAA tournament, where it lost in penalty kicks in the round of 16 to University of South Florida.

Rozeboom started 78 games in his Lobo career, the fifth highest total in UNM history. Green started in 67.

Green said he was happy to see that both players from UNM were eventually picked in the draft.

“It’s a good thing to see a fellow teammate drafted, especially Lance,” Green said. “I’ve known him for a long time. We grew up playing against one another, so it’s cool to see us move up in the ranks of soccer.”

Head coach Jeremy Fishbein said he felt Green and Rozeboom should have been drafted much higher than

where they landed, and felt they both have the skill to make their respective team’s rosters.

“I think that Mike and Lance were overlooked in the earlier rounds of the draft,” Fishbein said. “In my mind, they’re both MLS-caliber players and at this point, it doesn’t matter what number you are or what round you’re drafted in. It’s time to go out and prove yourself. I have complete confidence in their abilities to do so.”

The midfielders are the first UNM players drafted into the MLS since the 2009 season, when Justin Davis and Euan Holden were selected, though neither play in the MLS.

For Fishbein, it is nothing new to see Lobos make it to the top level of soccer in the United States. Since he took over at UNM in 2002, 11 players have gone professional, and seven are still on ac-tive professional team rosters.

He said he was excited to see more players he coached make it to the next level.

“We’re all excited for the guys to have this opportunity, and look for-ward to following them as they con-tinue their careers,” Fishbein said.

men’s soccer

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Friday, January 20, 2012 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo sports

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DAILY LOBOnew mexico

by Michael [email protected]

Getting the ball to the green and getting an “A” are one and the same for UNM men’s golf player John Catlin, a junior. He said it’s his rigorously busy schedule out-side class that keeps him at peak academic performance.

“I think that it’s helped me though. It keeps me more fo-cused,” Catlin said.

He is ranked fourth in the MWC and 32nd in the nation. He leads a Lobo squad looking to improve on a fifth place finish last season.

“John has had a great start to the season,” head men’s golf coach Glen Millican said. “The tournaments usually have fields of about 70 golfers. The fact that he has already had multiple top

Busy senior makes the grademen’s golf

10 finishes is a great sign.”Catlin, a business major, holds

a 3.7 cumulative GPA. Catlin said it’s difficult at times to balance school and athletics.

“I spend a lot of time on our trips doing schoolwork,” he said.

With an average of 71.3 strokes per round, Catlin is a force to be reckoned with on the green.

Catlin said he has no problem getting the ball to the green, but once it’s there, he needs to work on his short game.

“I’ve always been able to strike the ball well,” he said. “I need to work on my short game. Chipping can always be improved.”

Catlin was recently selected to participate in the Patriot All-America invitational. He was the only Lobo selected to participate in the event.

Millican said even with four seniors on the team, Catlin is a crucial part of the Lobo golf team, not just because of his ac-complishments on the course but for his accomplishments off the course, as well.

“We don’t have captains on the team,” Millican said. “Every year we count on the older guys to set the example. John does a great job in this regard.”

Catlin and the rest of the men’s team will play the remainder of their season on the road. Between now and the end of the golf sea-son, the Lobo men’s golf team will travel to tournaments in states such as Hawaii, California and South Carolina.

“It’s not every day you get a free week in Hawaii,” he said.

nfl

No. 1 picks face off at NFC game

Bill Kostroun / Associated PressNew York Giants quarterback Eli Manning throws a pass during an NFL football practice Thursday, in East Rutherford, N.J.

see Manning page 10

by Janie McCauleyThe Associated Press

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The Giants’ Eli Manning has been forced to escape the shadow of superstar big brother, Peyton. But San Francisco’s Alex Smith? He only has a pair of Hall of Famers in Joe Montana and Steve Young hanging over him in 49ers lore.

Two No. 1-pick quarterbacks a draft apart, Manning and Smith meet Sunday in the NFC champion-ship game with a shot at the Super Bowl after each has faced immense scrutiny over the years while play-ing on opposite coasts.

Manning made his mark by win-ning the 2008 Super Bowl. Smith took a significant step toward fi-nally silencing the skeptics — for the time being, anyway — by lead-ing last week’s thrilling, last-second 36-32 victory over Drew Brees and the favored Saints in a spectacular playoff debut.

Early on, there were the questions about whether Manning would ever become an elite NFL quarterback like the other big-time QBs in the family, including his father Archie.

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Page 10 / Friday, January 20, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

LOBO LIFE Event CalendarPlanning your weekend has never been easier!

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

FRIDAY 1/20CAMPUS EVENTSLobo Campus Civitan ClubStarts at: 5:00pmLocation: SUB Thunderbird RoomEvery Friday, pre-charter meetings for Lobo Campus Civitan Club! Service club working a variety of community service projects. Make new friends. Learn leadership skills. Free re-freshments!

Track: Cherry and Silver InvitationalTime: All DayLocation: UNMSupport your Lobos as they compete on Friday! Student admission is FREE!

COMMUNITY EVENTSThe Unauthorized Afterlife of Eugene O’Neill Starts at: 7:00pmLocation: The Adobe Theater 9813 4thThe critically-acclaimed original, full-length, one man show. This play provides a creative and unique vision of America’s greatest play-wright of the 20th century.

SATURDAY 1/21CAMPUS EVENTSJanuary’s Tail DateStarts at: 10:30amLocation: Los Altos Dog ParkIt’s time to play! Join us for our monthly meet-up at Los Altos Dog Park! Animal Humane’s Tail Date is a club for dog lovers to meet and social-ize.

Women’s BasketballStarts at: 2:00pmLocation: The PITSupport your Lady Lobos as they take on the Lady Rebels of The University of Las Vegas. Student admission is FREE!

Men’s TennisStarts at: 4:00pmLocation: UNMSupport your mens tennis team as they take on Nevada.

COMMUNITY EVENTSThe Unauthorized Afterlife of Eugene O’Neill Starts at: 7:00pmLocation: The Adobe Theater 9813 4th

The critically-acclaimed original, full-length, one man show. This play provides a creative and unique vision of America’s greatest play-wright of the 20th century.

SUNDAY 1/22CAMPUS EVENTSWerewolf The ForsakenWerewolf The ForsakenStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: SUB, Santa Ana A & BMind’s Eye Theatre UNM presents the Cama-rilla’s Werewolf The Forsaken venue. Play a character as part of White Wolf Publishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.Please call Marco at 505 453 7825 for informa-tion/confirmation.

COMMUNITY EVENTSDon GiovanniStarts at: 2:00pmLocation: KiMo Theatre 423 Central Ave NWThis audience favorite, for both its surprising modern plot and soaring melodies, is broad-cast LIVE from opening night at La Scala, with Daniel Barenboim at the podium.

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:1. Go to www.dailylobo.com

2. Click on “Events” link near the top of the page.

3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page.

4. Type in the event information and submit!

Please limit your desription to 25 words (although you may type in more, your description will be edited to 25 words. To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will apear with the title, time, lo-cation and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.

men’s basketball

by Cesar [email protected]

The men’s basketball team will head to Las Vegas this weekend to face its biggest challenge yet.

Coming off a 75-70 loss to No. 16 San Diego State at The Pit, the Lobos go to Las Vegas to face No. 20 UNLV.

“The Thomas & Mack Center is a tough environment and (UNLV) is outstanding,” head coach Steve Alford said. “They are a really good, deep basketball team.”

The Lobos (15-3, 1-1 MWC) are playing a Rebels team which opened conference play at San Diego State and came two points short of the win, but have key wins against then-No 1. North Carolina, No. 19 Illinois and California.

“It’s going to be a big test for our seniors,” Alford said. “This is go-ing to be the best basketball team we’ve played.”

The Runnin’ Rebels (17-3, 1-1 MWC) lost their top scorer from last year in Tre’Von Willis to grad-uation, but return four starters and have added two transfers. Senior guard Oscar Bellfield and juniors Anthony Marshall and Quintrell Thomas have helped the Rebels rank as high as 12th in na-tional polls.

Senior guard Chace Stanback leads the team in scoring, averag-ing 14.7 points per game, and was the go-to guy in the 10-point upset over North Carolina.

Sophomore forward Mike Moser is averaging a double-double this season with 14.0 points per game and 11.4 rebounds this season, after transferring from UCLA. Marquette transfer Reggie

Rebels game will be‘big test’ for seniors

The speculation calmed down for a time once he won a title. But criticism returned last season when Manning threw 25 intercep-tions. That’s when he boldly let it be known he should be in the same conversation as Patriots star Tom Brady and the rest of the NFL’s best lineup.

“I consider myself in that class,” Manning said in August.

Smith, drafted No. 1 from Utah in 2005 — one year after Manning was the top pick out of Ole Miss

Manning from page 9

Adria Malcolm / Daily LoboSan Diego State Aztecs screen Lobo senior forward Drew Gordon in the game Wednesday night at The Pit. The Lobos fell to the Aztecs 75-70 with Gordon scoring 15 points.

— won’t begin to compare his sit-uation out west to what Manning has endured.

“His (situation) is a little differ-ent. To be Peyton’s little brother, No. 1 pick, (when) you go to New York with the Giants, obviously that’s a lot of pressure,” Smith said. “I don’t think anyone has been in the situa-tion he has. Those are pretty unique circumstances. Your older brother is arguably the greatest quarter-back ever and a lot of expectation’s on you and then you go to the big

city like New York. I didn’t have to face those things.”

Smith got booed by his home fans at some point in nearly every game at Candlestick Park in recent seasons, before leading a remark-able turnaround this year under first-year NFL coach Jim Harbaugh. He’s been benched and belittled by more than one of his coaches along the way.

“I was saying this a few years ago and got laughed at, but Alex was a guy that had about 60 percent of his

ability, his potential, brought out in him because of all kinds of circum-stances,” said Trent Dilfer, ESPN analyst and Smith’s former team-mate. “What he was really relying upon to survive in the NFL was his mental and emotional strength, toughness, giftedness, whatever you want to call it. He is so men-tally strong, so resilient, refuses to let the demons affect him negative-ly … I knew once somebody came here and was able to develop him and train him like he started to get

trained with Norv (Turner) in 2006, that you would start to see some of the physical stuff come out. I’m just so happy for him because he found a guy in Jim Harbaugh who coached him the way he needed to be coached.”

Sunday’s game will mark the second time two former No. 1 pick QBs will square off in the confer-ence championship. Vinny Tes-taverde and John Elway met in the 1998 AFC championship game.

Smith just became eligible to play last month.

The Lobos this season are 8-1 away from The Pit, including 4-0 in non-neutral site games. Senior guard Phillip McDonald said his team has confidence to go and get a win in a hostile environment.

“I’m just going to remind my teammates that we’re a good ball club on the road,” McDonald said. “We’re just going to have to step it up at UNLV. We really need that game.”

Despite UNM’s success on the road under Alford, the Lobos have struggled in Las Vegas.

UNM is 5-16 all-time at the Thomas & Mack Center, including 1-3 under Alford.

The Lobos lost a 63-62 thrill-er last season in Las Vegas after sophomore guard Kendall Wil-liams missed one of his two free throws with 1.1 seconds left, which would’ve sent the game into overtime.

This time around, there might be a lot more scoring.

The Rebels like to run the court and have the ninth best offense in the country, averaging 81.6 points per game.

Because the conference sched-ule has been condensed from 16 games to 14, after the departure of Brigham Young and Utah, Alford said his team needs a victory to keep it alive in the Mountain West, but playing two ranked teams back-to-back is not an easy task.

“This was a difficult week,” Alford said. “It didn’t start out well for us. We’ve got to pick things up and we’ve got to try and make some adjustments and play better on Saturday.”

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Friday, January 20, 2012 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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Get your name out there with the Daily Sudoku505.277.5656

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE JANUARY 20, 2012

ACROSS1 Certain

lymphocytes7 Clumsy sort

10 Kind of signal14 Had none left15 Ajman and

Fujairah, for two17 Adelaide

altercation?19 “Are we ready?”20 Pose21 Relay part22 Singer’s yeshiva

boy25 Samoa’s capital29 Joint acct. info31 Beginning poet?34 Jazz __37 Keen on38 Pince-__

glasses39 Fight over the

last quart ofmilk?

42 ESP, e.g.44 Palm starch45 Exhaust46 One always

talking about hisMacBook Air?

49 Court team:Abbr.

53 Org. at 11 WallSt.

54 Rubs the rightway?

57 Big Applesubway div.

58 Sneeze, cough,etc.

61 Certain collegemember

63 Can’t color thesky, say?

68 Stuff in the back69 Soaks70 Cleaning

challenge71 Date72 Swarms

DOWN1 Gets behind2 Things to get

behind3 Naval officer4 Early 2000s

Senate minorityleader

5 Virginia’s __Caverns

6 Life time7 Island welcome

8 Emma’sportrayer in “TheAvengers”

9 Wins a certaincard game

10 Drink listing11 Hagen of

Broadway12 Alter, maybe13 Fashion

monogram16 Slugger’s stat18 Pine23 Bridge renamed

for RFK in 200824 Olin of “Alias”26 Glass piece27 Wrath28 Wood-smoothing

tool30 Place for buoys

and gulls32 Words spoken

before theSenate

33 Have-__:disadvantaged

35 Gentle slope36 __ League39 Market

fluctuations40 Wolf

Frankensteinshoots him, in a1939 film

41 Green span42 Trash, in a way43 Alias user47 Landlord’s

fileful48 Mtn. stat50 Like nobility51 Band on the

road52 Burnout cause55 Crayola color

renamed Peachin 1962

56 Cold Wardefense acronym

59 B&B60 Fords of the past62 Handle user, and

a hint to thispuzzle’s theme

63 Impede64 Unlock, in verse65 Mini-albums,

briefly66 Make haste67 Fire

Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

By Jack McInturff 1/20/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 1/20/12

Dilbert dailycrossword

dailysudoku Level 1 2 3 4

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 12012

Page 12 / Friday, January 20, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobo

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CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE, 2BDRM $750/mo utilities included. 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. Move in spe- cial. 262-0433.

1 BDRM APARTMENT. Newly remod- eled. 764-8724. 401A Buena Vista, Walk to school!

2BDRM. NEW PAINT/CARPETED. Laun- dry on-site. 3 blocks to UNM. Cats ok. No dogs. $755 including utilities. 246- 2038. www.kachina-properties.com 313 Girard SE.

A CLEAN 1BDRM hardwood floors, Downtown 709 Roma NW. $550 +dd and utilities. Call 480-9777.

SKY MANAGEMENT, INC. 3803 Aspen Ave NE 1/1. Only $425/mo.- 100 Move in Special + deposit. See sky-management.com 362-6151.

LARGE, CLEAN STUDIO. Furnished. walk/bike to UNM. No smoking or pets. 1 yr. lease. $600/mo includes utilities. 1st, last and $500 deposit. 268-1365.

LOBO VILLAGE, 1BDRM, 1BA,shuttle to campus, pool, workout facility, $499/mo, female needed, immediate move-in, $100 incentive, call or text 505- 681-9483.

NEWLY REMODELED LARGE 1 and 2 BDRM rent $400-575/mo. Deposit $150, Application Fee $25. Call 505-266- 0698.

COZY & LIGHT studio, hardwood and saltillo floors. Secure and quiet. Gar- den. Near rio bike trails, 8 min to UNM. Wi-Fi and utilities included, no pets. $450/mo +dd. 341-3042.

2BDRM 1BA NEW W/D and dish- washer, garbage disposal, FP, energy efficient windows refrigerated air. $715/mo +gas and electric +dd cats wel- come no dogs, NS. 617 Monroe NE. 550-1579.

BRIGHT LARGE 1BDRM w/ office. Liv- ing room, FP, large kitchen. No pets, NS. Shared laundry. $525/mo. Near CNM/UNM. 255-7874.

SEE THE BEST. Move in before new semester starts. 2 blocks to UNM. No car needed. Large 1 BDRM on beauti- ful Historic Silver Street. Prefer 1 Seri- ous Student who pampers property. Completely Furnished even with dishes. Just bring clothes and books. Wireless Internet, laundry, hardwood floors. Ref- erences. Lease. No drugs, pets, par- ties, smoking. Crime Free Policy prop- erty. Only $544/mo. For lucky student chosen. 505-220-8455, [email protected]

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, court- yards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

JANUARY RENT FREE. Spacious, tile flooring, 2BDRM 1BA, $500/mo, $500dd. No pets, NS. 401-5347 or 712-4364.

1BDRM APARTMENT IN victorian house. $500/mo. Utilities included. $300dd. 319-8476.

PARKSIDE APARTMENT. 1BDRM Large kitchen with pantry. Walk-in closet. Keyed courtyard. Walking dis- tance to UNM, across from Roosevelt park. $625/mo. 281-0303. 480-4436.

STUDIOS 1 BLOCK to UNM campus. Free utilities. Winter discount. 246- 2038. 1515 Copper NE. www.kachina- properties.com

1BDRM, 3 BLOCKS from UNM. Hard- wood floors, beamed wood ceiling, new windows, light and bright. 116 Sycamore. $575/mo +utilities, +dd, cats okay. No smoking. Call 550-1579.

DuplexesNICE 1 BDRM near UNM. Hardwood floors, updated BA, yard, off street parking. Available late Jan. $590/mo. + DD. 505-271-9686.

1BDRM HARDWOOD FLOORS. Fenced yard. Off-street parking. Pets okay. 1115 Wilmoore SE. $515/mo. $500dd. 362-0837.

Houses For Rent2BDRM 1BA HOUSE. Big lot/parking. W/D included. Fenced yard. Pets ok. 211 Maple. $1000/mo +$1000dd. 401-0252.

LOVELY LARGE 3BDRM. Walking dis- tance to UNM. 1814 Gold. Parking. W/D hookup. $950/mo. 299-2499.

3BDRM, W/D, BASEMENT, lots of park- ing. $1000/mo + $400 deposit. Does not include gas or electric. 2 blocks from UNM. 881-3540.

2BDRM 1BA. W/D. 2 1/2 blocks from UNM. $750/mo. $400 deposit. Does not include gas or electric. 881-3540.

NICE, 1600SQFT. QUIET neighborhood, very comfortable. 3BDRM, 1 3/4BA. Large sunroom, many amenities. No pets, NS. Call Cecelia at 450-5209.

3BDRM 2.5BA. 2 Car Garage. New con- struction. Minutes to UNM. $1,450/mo. 991-3213.

4BDRM, 2 1/2BA house with large kitchen and fenced yard for rent within 3/4 mile of UNM. Refrigerator, washer, dryer included. Hardwood floors, plaster walls and fireplace, screened and lock- able front porch. Please call 249-9138. $1100.00 a month, plus utilities.

Houses For Sale

SHARP 2BDRM 1BA home near UNM in a nice neighborhood. Excellent condi- tion, low utilities. For sale by owners 165K. Reasonable offers considered. 713 Van Buren Pl. SE. 238-3732.

Rooms For Rent

$310/MO AT GIRARD/SILVER w/broad- band. ISO studious male student to share 4 bdrm house. $310 + shared utilities. Ken 604-6322.

$400 INCLUDES UTILITIES. Private BDRM. Share BA w/1. Use of Kitchen/Dining/Living. Off-street park- ing. 3.7 miles to UNM. W/D. Dish- washer. Heat/Cool. Internet.Tera 550-8701 [email protected]

GRADUATE STUDENTS WANTED to share 3BDRM/ 2BA house with laundry room in UNM area. $425/mo + util. 505- 615-5115.

$499/MO CONTINUING LEASE through July. Private BDRM and BA, fully fur- nished, cable internet, kitchen, 24hr. fit- ness center, pool and much more. Con- tact Lucas 505-814-3200. [email protected]

CHRISTIAN WOMAN IN her 60’s has SAFE, clean house to share w/Respon- sible, quiet, NS-ND student. Cable, in- ternet, laundry, furnished. $400 +1/2 utilities +$100DD. 615-8825.

AVOID THE WAITLIST, Room for rent in Lobo Village. Availible now. $500/mo +utilities. Female needed to share with great roomates. Please contact if inter- estd 719-332-0481.

HELLO LADIES!Lobo village female opening $ 500-OBOCall: 241-9899.

ROOMMATE WANTED. 2BDRM, 1006 MLK NE, $295/mo, shared utilities. $150 DD, drug free, ideally 21 or older. 903-2863.

ROOM AVAILABLE FOR female at Lobo Village. Your own room, bathroom and walk in closet. $499 month includes utilities and amenities. Call 505-205- 8559.

AZTEC STORAGE ABSOLUTELY the BEST PRICE on storages.All size units.24 Hour video surveillance.On site manager.10 minutes from University.3rd month free.884-1909.3201 Aztec Road NE.

ROOMMATE WANTED. 4 blocks from campus. $405/mo including utilities and wireless internet. Available February 1st. 379-0605/ 268-0709.

UTILITIES & BUTLER incl. Student- Shared Home 4BDRM 2full-bath. 1 Block to UNM. i/j18 on campus map. Studious, tobacco-free students only. $625/mo. 505-918-4846.

ROOMMATE WANTED, PREFERABLY female, for condo close to UNM cam- pus. $400/mo +utilities. Call 915-422- 4814 for more info. Available immedi- ately.

ROOMS FOR SERIOUS students, fe- males preferred, fully furnished house in Spruce Park. 5 minute walk to Zim- merman. Water, WIFI, Yard, Cleaning service provided. Call 610-1142.

ROOM FOR RENT Old Town Plaza. $400. 505-206-0903

MASTER BED/BATH AVAILABLE Feb. 1. Two miles from UNM $415/mo. Call 575-313-4611.

2BDRM IN 6BDRM house by Spruce Park. $575 and $375. Utilities paid. Four student tenants, M&F. Kitchen, W/D. Call or text Tim 505-750-8593.

SERIOUS STUDENT, SPA-like home. Laundry, gym, study room, big kitchen, great area, bus/bike to UNM. $350, $450 with private BA Pets extra. 459- 2071.

LOBO VILLAGE ROOM for female $499/mo + electricity. Available immedi- ately. Please text/call 505-879-4003 for more information.

FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north cam- pus. $410/mo +1/4utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated com- munity. Access I-40 & I-25. [email protected]

PetsDASCHUND PUPPIES FOR sale. For details call 505-382-9440.

ALASKAN/SIBERIAN HUSKIES FOR sale. 203-9316.

For SaleT LOT PERMIT for sale. Selling for $90, less than half of the original price. Email [email protected] if interested.

NEW W. PUCK 20 liter convection oven for counter top. Large enough: pizza, roast chicken, cakes. Dorm-perfect! $70. Leave message 977-1850.

USED PSP-3000 in excellent condition.Comes with 5 games, two 1GB memory sticks, and aluminum case. AC adapter included. $150. [email protected]

Vehicles For Sale

1968 FORD MUSTANG white, runs well, 4 barrel carburetor, v8 engine, new starter, battery and tires. Asking $10,000obo. Call Sam at 505-916-7064.

MAZDA 2001 PROTEGE DX/LX, AT, fully loaded, 135K miles, looks/runs great! 32 MPG. One owner! $4,100- OBO. 505-933-1782.

FORD 2004 RANGER, XL/XLT. 116K. Excellent Condition. Looks/runs great! Clean Car Fax and Title! $5,700OBO. 505-933-1782.

Jobs Off Campus

ARE YOU EXCEPTIONALLY well orga- nized? UNM faculty member needs as- sistance with personal organization tasks. Short term, about 6 hours a week. Must be tech savvy, neat, and re- liable. Contact [email protected]

M&M SMOKESHOP IS hiring for an en- ergetic sales representative. Hourly plus commission w/ benefits. Flexible with student schedules. Bring resumes to: 1800 Central Ave SE Albuquerque NM, 87106.

UPWARD BOUND TUTORS wanted. 2 hrs/wk for high school students in math. $15/hr. 366-2521.

PT OFFICE CLERK. Uptown lawyer needs PT file clerk. Skills in word procession and related computer document control are very helpful. Flexible hours. Please re-spond by sending resume with cover let-ter including salary expectations to [email protected]

CO-TEACHER OPENINGS P/T PM posi- tions at accredited pre-school working with children. Ages 2-5. Experience with children is a must. Education or child development majors a plus. Call Becky 344-5888 or email [email protected]

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEP- TIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for spring employment for swimming in- structors and lifeguards. Apply at 4901 Indian School Rd. NE. or call 265- 6971.

MATI EXCLUSIVELY DESIGNED HIGH QUALITY JEWELRY! We are looking for Full & Part Time individuals who are self-motivated, ethusiastic, and sales goal driven! We are a NM family owned & operated business since 1975! You can be as brilliant as our jewelry! We of- fer advancement opportunities, great benefits and a unique company who thinks of our employees as “jewels”! Background check will be completed at time of employment. Applications ac- cepted at Old Town Plaza & Cotton- wood Shopping Mall or email [email protected]

AVON REPS NEEDED. Only $10 to start. Earn 40% of sales. Call Sherri 804-1005.

QUALIFIED INSTRUCTORS NEEDED for Blackbelt Karate, Cheer, Hip-Hop & Jazz Ballet. Teach ages 4-15. 1 night/ week, great P/T pay. 505-899-1666.

SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR/BOOKMAN NEEDS aide. 20+hrs/wk. Flexible sched- ule. Male student preferred. Contact [email protected] for details. Inter- esting. Enlightening. Fun.

SOCCER COACHES, PT Saturdays only. 3-5 hrs, coach youth ages 4-11, great PT pay. 898-9999.

PAID INTERNSHIPS. THE GREAT Academy, a free, public charter high school with a unique business model, is looking for mature computer science un- dergrad students (3rd or 4th year) or graduate students to provide IT sup- port. Also, we are hiring 3rd or 4th year education and business majors with customer service experience to work as a receptionist. For more information, visit thegreatacademy.org - Please send cover letters and resumes to [email protected]

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for life- guards and swimming instructors. Ap- ply at 4901 Indian School Rd. NE. 505- 265-6971.

SPECIAL EGG DONOR Sought. Gener- ous compensation. Please see ad un- der Health and Wellness.

THE UPS STORE in the Four Hills Shop- ping Center is looking for a Customer Service Representative. $10/hr., 2pm-6:- 30pm daily and 9-5 Saturdays. Send re- sume to [email protected]

SPORTS & ACTIVITY Leaders needed for before & after school programs. $10.50 hr., PT, M-F. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University NE.

PT CAREGIVER: EFFICIENCY apart- ment salary of $800/mo. Cable, utilities, internet access. Daily ride to/from CN- M/UNM (ideal for students) Helping male in wheelchair weekday evenings and mornings, applicants must be trust- worthy, reliable, with references, able to move 200 lbs. and have valid DL, we pay for drug and background check. No pets or smoking in premises. Located near Academy and Wyoming. 856-5276.

!!!BARTENDING!!!: $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training avail- able. 1-800-965-6520ext.100.

VB.NET/WPF/C# PROGRAMMER (flex part time). Send Cover Letter & Re- sume to [email protected]

PT CAFETERIA WORKER. 20hrs/wk for Domestic Violence Shelter. Requires 1 yr food service/ food prep experience and ability to work independently. Must be 21 years old, able to pass back ground check and able to work Satur- days and evenings until 7pm. Apply to [email protected] or fax 505-224- 9695.

WANTED: WAREHOUSE WORKERS, Night Shift.National Distributing Co. has openings for night shift, effective immediately. These positions work Monday night thru Thursday night, 6pm until loading is completed (usually no later than 6am the following morning). Apply online at: www.ndcweb.com/home1/careers. htm

Volunteers

UNM IS LOOKING for adult women with asthma for asthma research study. If you are interested in finding out more about this study, please contact Teresa at [email protected] or 269- 1074 (HRRC 09-330).

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! AGORA Helpline. Help Others-Class Credit- Great Experience! Just a few hours a week! 277-3013. Apply online! www.AgoraCares.com

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